Fantasy · Diverse Representation

5 hand-picked fantasy and diverse representation books curated by NextBookAfter.

FantasyDiverse Representation
Cover of Black Sun

Black Sun

If Katabasis hooked you with its unflinching critique of academic elitism and systemic injustices through morally ambiguous scholars in a myth-reimagined hellscape, Black Sun delivers that same intellectual ferocity via prophecy-driven power struggles in an Indigenous-inspired world. Kuang's blend of lyrical horror and emotional gut-punches finds its match in Roanhorse's brutal prose that honors diverse myths while dismantling hierarchical decay. No easy escapes here—just the raw thrill of ambition clashing with cultural erasure, perfect for progressive readers hungry for thought-provoking fantasy.

Cover of Black Water Sister

Black Water Sister

If Katabasis's savage takedown of colonial theft left you breathless, Black Water Sister weaponizes Malaysian spirits against diaspora erasure with the same intellectual ferocity. Morally compromised heroines, ancestral possession as metaphor, and dialogue that eviscerates cultural hypocrisy—this is fantasy that refuses to comfort you.

Cover of Foundryside

Foundryside

Six of Crows gripped you with its high-stakes heists, morally gray anti-heroes like ruthless Kaz, and the found family bonds forged in Ketterdam's underworld. Foundryside amps up that thrill with intricate theft schemes in a magic-infused industrial city, where flawed protagonists navigate ethical chaos, sharp banter, and unpredictable twists. If you loved the emotional depth, diverse representation, and witty commentary on corruption, this is your next obsession-worthy read.

Cover of The Bruising of Qilwa

The Bruising of Qilwa

Craving more forbidden magic that crawls under your skin after Gideon the Ninth? This one trades space tombs for colonial tension and plague mysteries, delivering a healer protagonist whose blood magic could save or destroy. Same irreverent wit, same queer chaos, same emotional gut-punch—just with magic that demands a price and found family forged in desperation.

Cover of The Fifth Season

The Fifth Season

Butler's unflinching collapse prophecy meets its match: a world where apocalypse is cyclical, inevitable, and only endurance matters. Jemisin centers Black women wielding dangerous power through environmental catastrophe and systemic oppression, delivering the same raw truth-telling about human resilience and darkness that made Parable essential reading for anyone who knows optimism is a luxury we can't afford.